The US and
Israel continue to strike
Iran, hitting oil storage depots and refining facilities for the first time.Published On 8 Mar 2026The
United States and
Israel are continuing large-scale strikes on
Iran, including an attack on an oil depot on Saturday, as the conflict has widened to include the
Gulf region as well as
Lebanon and
Iraq.
Iran has said the US will pay for waging war and continued its retaliatory strikes on
Israel and US military assets in
Kuwait,
Qatar,
Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates, despite Iranian President
Masoud Pezeshkian promising on Saturday to halt attacks on Gulf states as long as their territories were not used to attack
Iran.Here is where things stand on day nine of the war:In
Iran Military attacks and rising casualties: The US and
Israel have continued large-scale strikes on
Iran and struck oil storage depots and refining facilities for the first time in the country. Late on Saturday, local media captured footage of a massive fire raging at the Shehran oil depot on the outskirts of
Tehran. The Israeli military claimed responsibility for striking fuel storage and related sites it alleges are affiliated with the Iranian armed forces. At least 1,332 people have been killed since
Israel and the US launched attacks on February 28. US demands: President
Donald Trump continued with his demand for an “unconditional surrender” from
Iran. Late on Saturday, he stated that the war would continue for “a little while” but stressed that Washington was not looking “to settle with
Tehran”. Maritime threats and movements: The Iranian military confirmed that the Strait of Hormuz remains open, but it explicitly stated that it would target any US or Israeli ships attempting to pass through. On Saturday, when asked by journalists about the lack of traffic through the strait, Trump said it was the choice of the ships and claimed that Washington has “wiped out”
Iran’s navy. Relations with neighbours: President
Masoud Pezeshkian reiterated that
Tehran wants good relations with the brotherly neighbouring countries, stating that the enemy is trying to create divisions. Pezeshkian said his remarks were “misinterpreted by the enemy that seeks to sow division with neighbours”, state TV reported on Sunday. His comments came as countries across the
Gulf region reported drone strikes from
Iran.
Iran’s new leadership: Ayatollah Mohammad-Mahdi Mirbagheri, a member of
Iran’s Assembly of Experts, hinted that a decision on a successor to the slain Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei was near. In a video posted by the Fars news agency on Telegram, Mirbagheri said “great efforts to determine the leadership” had been made and that “a decisive and unanimous opinion” had been reached. War crimes: Human Rights Watch said the attack on a primary school in southern
Iran that killed at least 160 people, many of them schoolchildren, should be investigated as a war crime. Al Jazeera’s investigation has also found that the targeting of the school was likely “deliberate”, while The New York Times reported that the strike may have been carried out by the US. Intelligence report: A report conducted by the US National Intelligence Council found that a “large-scale” US-led assault on
Iran was unlikely to topple the country’s government, according to The Washington Post. The report also described the prospect of
Iran’s fragmented opposition taking control of the country as “unlikely”. Oil trade: The war has roiled global markets, and oil prices have hit multiyear highs, with the Strait of Hormuz effectively shut. In one week of the war, Brent crude oil price climbed 27 percent, the biggest weekly gain since the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020. In Gulf nations